The High-Wizard's Hunt: Osric's Wand: Book Two (20 page)

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Authors: Ashley Delay,Jack D. Albrecht Jr

Tags: #The Osric's Wand Series: Book 2

BOOK: The High-Wizard's Hunt: Osric's Wand: Book Two
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Osric knew he could not afford to use the
traveling
spell until they had learned who was behind the deeds that brought them to where they were, and the gag made the choice an easy one. Kenneth proposed that they use their power to wreak havoc on the leaders and figure out who was behind it in the process, but Osric knew their only hope was to appear helpless and cooperative until the knowledge presented itself. The fact that they were hanging from a wall in the same cell Kenneth’s new gift had shown him led him to believe that they were on the right path. At least, he had to believe he was right, or hope would have disappeared from his heart the moment they arrived.

The door to the room opened and Aron strode in with two hooded men. “I trust you have enjoyed your stay?” One of the men removed the gags and Osric grimaced at the strong scent of garlic on the man’s breath. His face and arms were scarred and covered with strange designs burned into his skin. The other carried in all of the weapons confiscated on the road, and then he closed the door and turned to guard it. Aron stood cross-armed and glaring at Osric.

“The service here is terrible. I ordered food nearly an hour ago.” Kenneth looked up defiantly as he spoke. “And the pillows are in serious need of a good fluffing.” He motioned to the stone wall with his head.

The tattooed man stepped quickly over to Kenneth, bringing a fist into his stomach for the remark.

“Stop,” Osric shouted as Kenneth gasped and coughed with the force of the blow. Knowing he was on the right path did not make watching his friend get beaten any easier. He cringed within, knowing that it would not be the last strike if the vision was any indication.

The heavily muscled man looked over at him, and Osric could see his marred face sneering back with satisfaction as sweat rolled off of his bald head. He moved close, cracking his knuckles and rolling his neck. Osric braced himself for the coming strike, knowing he could not defend himself.

“Hold,” Aron spoke as the man raised a fist, about to strike Osric in the face. “As you can see, Tolbert is rather fond of beating prisoners. He tends to get more carried away if I am not happy with the answers you give.”

“Good idea,” Kenneth spoke again. “You seem to have your hide handed to you anytime you do your own fighting. You should have brought this man with you to Braya.”

Fire grew to a blaze in Aron’s eyes, and he nodded in Kenneth’s direction. Tolbert struck him in the face several times while Osric protested. Aron did nothing to stop him, but it was only a few blows before he paused. Osric breathed a sigh of relief as Kenneth spat blood upon the dirty, stone floor.

“The deal was that you would take us to the person in charge, first,” Osric barked at Aron, immediately regretting the outburst as pain shot down his neck and cheek from a quick strike of Tolbert’s knuckles.

“The deal will change as I see fit.” Aron’s voice took on a slithering quality. “As you can see, your sword and wand are sitting on the table.” He pulled up a chair and sat, staring at Osric. “My master wants you to feel as comfortable as you can, until he kills you. But, you are going to answer a few questions of mine first. To start, what brought you to Rowain?”

“It was the first town when we got off the boat, you fool.” Osric already knew that Aron could not be trusted, so giving him any clue to their actual intentions would be foolhardy. “Machai knew Kablis, the leader of the delivery team. We were joining them for a meal on our way home when you arrived.”

“You’re lying,” Aron said. “Beat him.” He pointed a thick finger at Osric. “No, beat him.” Aron eyed Osric as he gave the order to have Kenneth hurt, smiling with satisfaction at the distress in Osric’s expression. Aron stood up and pressed Osric’s face against the cold stone, forcing him to watch.

Osric tried to resist, but he could not pull away. The hooded, garlic reeking man laid into Kenneth without mercy. Kenneth laughed at the man as he was battered, choking on his own blood, sweat, and saliva. Though he was inflicting pain on a massive scale, it soon became apparent to Osric that the man was holding back intentionally. Osric had unintentionally began to probe the man with the Empath gift he had inherited from Bridgett. The guard did not enjoy his job, and he halted the beating temporarily, looking back at Aron.

Kenneth looked at Osric, with swollen eyes and a bloody face, and smiled. “Do you think he would be happier if we gave him a few coppers to swallow,” he said. Then he looked at Aron. “I hear they can do wonders for your constipation, and that would improve your mood considerably.”

Aron spat at Kenneth and pushed the guard out of the way. He struck Kenneth with the backside of his hand and took a fistful of hair in his grasp. “My mood will be the least of your worries if you speak to me that way again. You will have a hard time eating without a tongue.” Then he kicked a heavy boot into Kenneth’s stomach.

Osric could not watch as Kenneth was tortured, so he offered a truth he felt he could afford without giving too much away. “I will tell you why we are here, if you promise to stop this and let us talk to your superior.” He hung his head in resignation.

“I’m listening.” Aron grasped his hands behind his back and slowly stepped in front of Osric.

“We are trying to delay the war.”

“What,” Kenneth shouted, looking at Osric in disbelief. Osric looked at him with an apologetic stare, but he could see no other way.

“Why would you want to delay the war?” Aron inclined his head in curiosity, examining Osric’s face for sincerity.

“Our investigation of the explosion has shown some information that suggests strange activities in our government before the palace was destroyed. We don’t know if the Turgent knows about these activities, or if he is behind them. We need to find out who was responsible before going to war or countless lives will be lost!” Osric held Aron’s gaze, probing him for emotions. Genuine shock covered all other emotions as his eyes widened.

“So, your efforts have all been to delay things while you investigated?” He walked away, pacing the room. His eyes wandered the floor as he spoke, “You, freeing the dragons, and fighting with the dwarves?”

“Yes,” Osric answered as Aron looked up at him, excitement filled his mind, and a smirk grew wider on his face.

“You don’t know how close you were. You may have found your answers if only you had not been caught.” Aron crossed the room, rubbing his palms together mischievously as he approached. He leaned in, nearly touching his forehead to Osric’s as he spoke. “But now, I have you here.” Aron turned and headed for the door, motioning the men to follow.

“You said you would let me speak to your superior!”

He turned back with a laugh. “We knew you might be a problem. You were supposed to die in the palace.” Signaling the men to wait at the door, he swaggered back. “What a clever pest you have become.”

“If you are this rude to all of your guests,” Kenneth spoke through swollen lips, “it’s no wonder your parties only have men.”

Aron glared at Kenneth with clenched teeth. Osric could feel the rage rising up inside of him. It was somewhat disorienting to discern the difference in his own feelings and Aron’s. The wild shifting between emotions that he was experiencing, mingling with his own, were difficult to navigate in his head.

“That is the last time you will insult me,” he signaled to the guard with bloody fists, “gag him. I will decide if he should keep his tongue tonight.”

“If you could douse it in a nice wine, that would be great.” Kenneth smiled up at him as he hung on the wall. “I’m in the mood for a red, if you have it. What do you think, Osric? One last toast to celebrate beating Aron for a second time?”

Aron filled with rage, but Osric could sense his restraint. Even as he kicked Kenneth repeatedly in the side, he held back. There were much darker places within him, and Osric could sense them, buried deep beneath the layer of calm that covered his face. Osric’s pleading went unheeded until Kenneth hung limp from the chains, his shallow breathing the only reassurance that he had survived the beating. The guard nervously placed the gag loosely on Kenneth and backed away toward the door.

Aron stood once more in front of Osric with grim satisfaction on his face. His breath came heavily from his latest activities, and the sweat that ran down his face gave him a sinister quality.

“You freed the dragons and nearly stopped the weapons shipment. Then you come in here with demands?” His voice was weary, and in the dim light Osric could hear water trickling as Aron whispered. “I guess you should know who you were up against before we kill you. I will tell you so you know just how futile your struggle has been.”

Osric looked up to meet the cold, determined eyes of a madman. His Portentist gift flared once again, and he felt the hairs on his neck stand in anticipation. The information was valuable, and Osric realized what had happened in the room. The beatings, the insults, the lack of concern for himself and careless way Kenneth had been acting was actually a plan. Osric wasn’t sure when Kenneth had come up with the idea, or why, but Osric hated letting his friend take a beating just so he could get information. However, discussing the sacrifice would have to wait until they were free. Kenneth had been goading Aron the whole time, hoping to make him lose his calm and gloat.

“Like they would trust you with a secret of that nature.” Kenneth mocked him one last time before the gag was forced into his mouth. Another vicious kick from Aron was his reward.

“You have no idea what I know.” Aron spun around, screaming in reply as he towered over Kenneth, breathing heavily from the exertion. “Leave us!”

The guards snapped to attention, nervously making their way to the door, and left the three of them alone in the dark room. The silence was only cut by the water dripping, the echo of Aron’s footsteps, and the cold, gravelly breath of the three men.

“You should already be dead.” Aron pointed at Osric. “He planned the destruction of the Ratification Ceremony, not only to start the war,” he shook his head, “but he had you promoted to make sure you would be in that palace. How did you get out of that rubble?”

Osric shook his head, unable to understand the mystery of his survival. He wanted to believe it had something to do with the unicorn, but he was starting to wonder if it had saved him or changed him somehow. Either way, he would not answer the question. He felt that he had given away too much information already, and his gift was reinforcing the importance of this little conversation already.

“Why would he want me dead?”

“That Portentist gift of yours, and you have to ask that question.” Aron walked to the table in the room, examining the weapons he had taken. “You have gathered a great deal of information, and in a short time, too. He knew you could be a problem and wanted to take care of that before it was an issue.”

“You keep saying ‘he.’” Osric watched Aron as he picked up his newly fashioned sword, and turned it over in his gloved hands. “Who is this man?”

“Man?” Aron arched his eyebrow and looked back. “If you only knew.” A wicked smile covered his face and he set the sword down, crossing the room and placing the soiled rags back into Osric’s mouth. “Why he does what he does is for him to tell you, but you both will be executed in the morning. That is your payment for what you did at Braya.” He patted Osric on the cheek.

Silence filled the room, and Osric closed his eyes. The pitter patter of rodents scurrying, dripping water, and all other sounds were drowned out to the intensity of the sensation the Portentist gift placed on the next words. Goose pimples covered his body in anticipation of the information. Though his hearing became sharper, it focused so that all other stimuli disappeared.

“The Turgent ordered your death, but he has not been himself for a year now. A spell placed the will of another man in his heart, and that man has been leading us all. I will tell you who has beaten you,” Aron whispered in his ear. “Konsult Dredek.” Aron stepped back, his gloating face barely visible in the dim light.

Aron turned toward the table and gathered Osric’s wand in his hand. “A Gus wand is hard to come by in these parts. I think I will keep it.” He placed it in his belt.

Osric needed that wand. He could not let Aron take it, and he had all the information he had come for. For the first time since his capture, Osric felt panic rising up inside. Watching his wand moving toward the door brought him to almost unbearable longing. The wand was the source of all of his frustrations, the reason behind his changes, and was directly accompanied by the most foul mouthed prairie dog he had ever met. Yet, he found himself strangely desperate to hold it again.

Osric began to grind his teeth on the filthy towel that held back his words, hoping he could break through. Aron looked back at him after knocking on the door.

“Too bad you are stuck in here. I imagine this information would have been helpful. Don’t you wish you had let me kill that
dwarf
?”

*

Though he had not made much progress wearing through the gag with his teeth, Osric had managed to stretch the fabric with the motion. Then he attempted to push the soiled restraint out of his mouth with his tongue, leaving it burning in protest to the unnatural effort. Each time he tried, he could push the cloth out a bit further, then pulled it back in and began to stretch it again with the grinding of his teeth. He lost track of time in his struggle to free his mouth, pausing only at the sound of guards talking outside the door.

The taste of manure and urine permeated his mouth, but he knew the effort needed to continue. He pushed through the shaking of his tongue and wore it raw while trying to free himself. His final push forced the vile taste over his lips, and one final shake till it dropped from his chin to his chest.

“Eo ire itum,” Osric whispered. He found himself standing a few feet away, facing the door. He turned, rubbing his sore wrists and exhausted beyond reason, to face Kenneth. Quickly he tore the gag away and shook his unconscious, restrained friend. Kenneth stirred, wide eyed and favoring his right side.

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